IMMIGRANTS AND THE NOVA SCOTIA JUSTICE SYSTEM: IDENTIFYING ISSUES AND ASSESSING THE FEASIBILITY OF FURTHER RESEARCH DON CLAIRMONT AND ETHAN S.

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1 Atlantic Metropolis Centre ~ Working Paper Series Centre Métropolis Atlantique ~ Série de documents de recherche IMMIGRANTS AND THE NOVA SCOTIA JUSTICE SYSTEM: IDENTIFYING ISSUES AND ASSESSING THE FEASIBILITY OF FURTHER RESEARCH BY DON CLAIRMONT AND ETHAN S. KIM ATLANTIC INSTITUTE OF CRIMINOLOGY DALHOUSIE UNIVERSITY DECEMBER 2010 Working Paper No Série de documents de recherche

2 The Atlantic Metropolis Centre s Working Papers Series Série de documents de recherche du Centre Métropolis Atlantique The views expressed in this paper are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the Atlantic Metropolis Centre or its funders. Les opinions contenues dans cet article sont celles des auteur(s) et ne sont pas nécessairement partagées par le Centre Métropolis Atlantique ou ses partenaires. Copyright of this paper is retained by the author(s) Copyright de cet article est maintenu par l'auteur(s) AMC Working Papers Series / Série de documents de recherche du CMA Attention: Shiva Nourpanah The Atrium, Suite 213, Saint Mary s University 923 Robie St., Halifax, NS, Canada B3H 3C3 / courriel: atlantic.metropolis@smu.ca Website / site Web: We are pleased to acknowledge the AMC s partner organizations: Federal Government Partners: Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, Canada Border Services Agency, Canada Economic Development for the Regions of Quebec, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Canadian Heritage, Citizenship and Immigration Canada, FedNor, Human Resources and Social Development Canada, Department of Justice Canada, Public Health Agency of Canada, Public Safety Canada, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, The Rural Secretariat, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, Statistics Canada Three Lead Universities: Saint Mary's University, Dalhousie University, and Université de Moncton. Community Partners: Immigrant Settlement and Integration Services (ISIS), Multicultural Association of Nova Scotia (MANS), New Brunswick Multicultural Council, PEI Association for Newcomers, Multicultural Association for the Greater Moncton Area, Association for New Canadians (ANC) of Newfoundland, Canadian Council for Refugees (CCR), YMCA Newcomer Service. Le CMA tient à remercier chaleureusement les partenaires suivants pour leur soutien: Partenaires fédéraux: Agence de promotion économique du Canada atlantique, Agence des services frontaliers du Canada, Développement économique du Canada pour les régions du Québec, Société canadienne d'hypothèques et de logement, Patrimoine Canada, Citoyenneté et Immigration Canada, FedNor, Ressources humaines et Développement social Canada, Ministère de la Justice Canada, Agence de la santé publique du Canada, Sécurité Publique Canada, Gendarmerie royale du Canada, Le Secrétariat rural, Conseil de recherches en sciences humaines, Statistique Canada Les trois universités à la direction: Saint Mary's University, Dalhousie University et l'université de Moncton. Nos partenaires communautaires: L'Association multiculturelle de Nouvelle-Écosse, Le Conseil multiculturel du Nouveau-Brunswick, L'Association multiculturelle du Grand Moncton, Association métropolitaine pour l'établissement des immigrants, PEI Association for Newcomers, L'association des nouveaux canadiens de Terre- Neuve, Conseil canadien pour les réfugiés, YMCA Newcomer service, Immigrant Settlement and Integration Services (ISIS), 2

3 TABLE OF CONTENTS Contents Page # Introduction 3 Brief Review of Literature 3 Social Demographic Patterns: Canada, Nova Scotia and HRM 4 Immigrants and the Justice System: Victimization 6 Immigrants and the Justice System: Offending 7 Immigrants and the Justice System 9 Immigrants and the Justice System: Family Court & Women s Rights 10 Socio-Demographic Tables 12 Survey Data from Violence and Public Safety in HRM 18 Telephone an d Mail-back Surveys ( ) 18 Student On-Line Survey (2008) 19 Tables 21 Interview Data 37 Views and Concerns from the Immigrant Scene, Interview Data Expectations and Experiences 41 Immigrants as Victims and Offenders 43 Family Violence and Courts 44 Immigrants and the Police Services 46 Information and Justice 47 Comparison of Justice Systems 48 Immigrant Communities as Justice Brokers 49 Conclusions and Future Directions 52 Working Bibliography 58 Appendix 60 3

4 INTRODUCTION This pilot project has focused on preparation of a major project examining how immigrants in Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) view the significant problem of violence, crime and public safety in HRM and what their experiences in these regards may have been as offenders, victims, witnesses or support persons. There was an interest also in appreciating their concerns with respect to family and regulatory justice systems. The immigrant communities can be expected to vary significantly. Previous research by the principal investigator (see Extra-Judicial Sanctions in a Complex Urban Community, 2006) certainly pointed to considerable variation and such variation would presumably be even greater here since international students made up a significant proportion of one of the large surveys that we will be analyzing as secondary data sets (Clairmont, 2008). We will be examining patterns of involvement in the criminal justice system based on justice statistics already at hand, and views and perspectives based on survey responses available via three large random samples of HRM adults in The write-up will deal with fears and worries about crime and public safety, perceptions of risk, adaptive strategies, informational sources and levels and types of social integration as factors impacting on the respondents views and perspectives. The justice statistics and three public surveys (sample sized 1207, 1982 and 1542 respectively) can be considered as secondary data since the original research generating the data had other primary objectives; nevertheless, there were much good data to be mined here with respect to immigrants views and perspectives. In addition to the secondary data analyses, at least twenty interviews, one-on-one interviews, were carried out with immigrant community leaders and supporters (e.g., ISIS / MISA) following an interview guide (see appendix) developed by the principal investigator in the 2006 project referred to above. The interviews sought not only information on views and experiences but also to identify possible sources of data and suggestions concerning future study. Additionally, there was a review of the salient literature. By bringing together existing data and building upon it to capture cultural nuances and discourses, there will be opportunity to see more clearly what kinds of future research along these lines should be and could be done in collaboration with immigrant communities. The pilot project allowed funding for a part-time law student - research assistant who searched the literature and carried out the new interviews to supplement the research carried out by the principal investigator two years earlier. This new work was completed in May BRIEF REVIEW OF LITERATURE Much of the accessible research literature found was European and dealt with the construction of data sets and putting into place a scientific infrastructure for subsequent research. In terms of the Canadian literature, there was substantial material on the various dimensions of the refugee issues and on issues of immigration law, topics that were outside the primary focus of this modest project. Also outside was the burgeoning field of immigration, security and terrorism that has been crowding out the other conventional research and policy agenda on immigrants and the justice system. Clearly both the above justice research thrusts are vital, the latter in particular since the legal and policy challenges for human rights, citizenship, and avoiding stereotypy in the legitimate quest for security are so complex; moreover, the impact that such policy might have on the criminal justice system should not be underestimated. However the thrust in this modest pilot project was on immigrant experiences and viewpoints regarding the criminal justice system. In the area of criminal justice, whether offending or 4

5 victimization patterns, the research and policy-related emphasis was found to be on domestic / intimate partner and other family violence; here much literature dealt with either the response of immigrant female victims or the clash of inter-generational immigrant viewpoints and experiences. The review of literature was helpful in the creation of the interview guide used in the one-on-one interviews, also in providing additional contexts and insights throughout the interview processes, and in framing the big picture as the final report of this pilot project was being written. Materials included reports from national and local research projects on immigrants, visible minorities and other specific subject areas salient to understanding justice themes for immigrants. Socio-demographic Patterns: Canada, Nova Scotia and HRM Immigrants represent an increasingly significant percentage of the total Canadian population. In 2006, 20% of the Canadian population were immigrants, and 95 % of them lived in urban areas (1). The unemployment rate of recent immigrants doubled that of non-immigrants (the age structure difference partly accounts for this gap) and average incomes of immigrants were considerably lower though this latter gap narrowed over time (see table 8 for this pattern in Nova Scotia). Most visible minorities in Canada in the mid-2000s were immigrants, increasing in 2006 from the already high 7 out of 10 found in the 2001 census (2). Leaving aside the complex category Aboriginal, the Chinese constitute the largest grouping of visible minorities followed by South Asians and Blacks. The population of visible minorities in Canada has doubled in the last ten years, basically due to the increase of immigrants from outside Europe and the USA. Still, only 9% of the visible minority immigrants could not speak either English or French well enough to carry on a conversation (3). Tables 1 and 2 locate the immigration patterns for Nova Scotia and HRM. Table 1 indicates clearly that, assuming zero net immigration, Nova Scotia s population will experience steady decline, going from roughly 935,000 in 2010 to under 900,000 in just fifteen years. The table also shows that the % of the population aged 5 to 18 fell from 18% to 15% in the first decade of the new century and will further decline to 13.6% over the next fifteen years. It is understandable then that getting immigrants to come to Nova Scotia and keeping them here has become an important policy for the provincial government. Table 2 shows that metropolitan Halifax HRM has steadily increased its share of the provincial immigrant population since 1960 and in recent years (up to 2010) regularly receives 80% of these immigrants. At the same time, the table also shows that the provincial share of Canada s immigrant population has remained steady and small since 1960, accounting for about half of one percent of the latter. Tables 3 and 4 indicate that the proportion of immigrants in the HRM metropolitan area has essentially remained at 7% and the equivalent proportion for Nova Scotia as a whole at 5% since 1986, while the proportion in Canada as a whole has steadily risen during the same period. The 2006 census indicated that these three trends have largely continued over the past ten years (e.g., the Canadian proportion is now 20%). Table 3 describes the three trends clearly, namely low to no growth for Nova Scotia, very modest growth for HRM and significant growth for Canada in terms of the number of immigrants. Table 6 describes the changing identities of the immigrants in HRM over time. Interestingly, American and European immigrants accounted for roughly 70% of the immigrants before 1986 and the dominant United Kingdom itself accounted for roughly one-third of all immigrants. In the era, the American and European identity accounted for only 17% of the immigrants and United Kingdom for but 4%; the leading immigration country was the People s Republic of China which accounted for 9% of all immigration. The 2006 census show that overall the 5

6 USA, U.K., China and Iran each accounted for roughly 9% of all the immigrants in Nova Scotia. The other significant contributors were Korea (6%), Jordan and Taiwan (each 5%), India, Philippines and Egypt. The non-european immigrants, who, typically, but not always of course, can be classified as visible minorities, are clearly the drivers for immigration, currently and in the foreseeable future. Table 7 indicates that, in addition to changing ethnic/racial identities, the immigrants to Nova Scotia and HRM have also been changing in terms of their socio-economic status. Economic immigrants with investment options have become by far the major type of immigrant, accounting for 79% of all the immigration in the period 1996 to 2000 compared to but 43% in the period The proportion of immigrants who were family class or refugee declined considerably from the period. This strategic emphasis in immigration policy has remained a government priority so one would expect data to reflect a similar distribution of immigrant types. It translates into an immigration pool that is better educated and of higher SES than previous immigrant cohorts, and that can be very mobile in terms of seeking and taking advantage of economic opportunities elsewhere. Clearly if Nova Scotia and HRM is to attract and hold such immigrants, quality of life considerations, including a responsive and engaging culturally sophisticated justice system, will be important. Other crucial facets of the immigration trends for Nova Scotia include 4 in 10 recent immigrants have university degrees, which is more than earlier immigrant groups, and twice as many as among the Canadian-born. Recent immigrants in Halifax tend to be employed in jobs that require a high level of skill, but for university graduates the skill requirements of jobs are lower for recent immigrants than for the Canadian born (i.e., their education and skill level exceeds the job requirements). The comparative well-being and income levels of immigrants in Nova Scotia depends upon time of arrival but income in the recent decade was higher by onethird than given years earlier, a larger change than for other immigrant cohorts and the Canadian-born. While 1 of every 3 immigrants between 1996 and 2001 was in a low wage situation (double the proportion for Canadian-born) in the early 2000s, the data indicate that immigrants end up with higher incomes than non-immigrants. Immigrants and the Criminal Justice System: Victimization Immigrants have had a lower rate of violent victimization than that of the Canadian-born population as indicated in recent GSS studies (1999 and 2004 where in the latter there were reportedly 68 incidents per 1,000 population vs 116 incidents per 1,000 population in the general population) (4). In general, immigrants have had low levels of overall victimization but this generalization may understate as victimization that which occurs within the family and immigrant community (perhaps even under-considered as victimization by the victims). More is known about victimization among visible minorities. They, as noted, make up a large segment of the immigrant 6

7 population; overall, according to the GSS and other CCJS data, they exhibited victimization patterns quite similar to the general population. All of the differences between visible minority and nonvisible majority were typically less than 10% differences (5). For example, visible minorities had slightly less risk of being victims of violent crime, as their rate of victimization was 98 per 1000 population while the non-visible majority rate was 107. The central difference by far was not between visible minorities and other immigrants but between native-born and foreign-born (immigrant) visible minorities. Canadian-born visible minorities had rates of violent victimization in 2004 that were three times higher than visible minorities who were born abroad. Canadian- born visible minorities were younger, more likely to be single and more likely to be low-income earners than foreign-born counterparts. Canadian-born visible minorities also participated more in a larger number of evening activities; studies have shown that these factors have typically been related to greater risk of victimization (6). The research findings with respect to fear of crime and victimization generally follow the same patterns as victimization, and the overlap between immigrant and visible minority confounds simple analysis. For example, one study reported that immigrants feel slightly more fearful of crime than non-immigrants (11 % vs. 8 %). The immigrants considered that crime rates were higher in their neighbourhood than elsewhere in Canada. There was significant variation in these views by region not to speak of whether the immigrant was visible minority or otherwise, and what racial / ethnic group they belonged to (7). Immigrants in Quebec and Atlantic Provinces expressed lower levels of fear than those residing in Ontario and British Columbia (i.e., 60% 60% felt safe vs. 52% 50 %). Visible minorities were more fearful than others and reportedly less likely to engage in various activities because they considered themselves unsafe in their area. Visible minorities were more likely than their non-visible minority counterparts to consider that certain social situations pose a problem in their neighborhood. This undoubtedly can be attributed to the higher proportion of visible minorities living in at-risk urban areas, where the following problems tend to be more prevalent: loud parties, noisy neighbors, people loitering, people sleeping in streets, presence of garbage, vandalism, harassment or attacks motivated by racial, ethnic or religious intolerance, presence of drugs, public drunkenness and prostitution. Again, the native-born visible minorities (e.g., Aboriginal, Black) were more likely to be living in the high risk areas and expressing these fears; by comparison, immigrants were even less likely than non-immigrants to report these problems. The patterns of reported victimization and fear of crime and victimization in HRM are discussed below in the analyses of survey data and personal interviews. Immigrants and the Criminal Justice System: Offending There was disappointingly little accessible research material found on crime patterns among immigrants whether in Canada or in Nova Scotia. The combination of scant research, lack of race/ethnic breakdown in police and court data systems, and the small immigrant population in areas like Nova Scotia, account for this shortfall. Additionally, research carried out by the principal investigator has indicated that there are crime specializations associated with different immigrant groups (e.g., the drug trade in Vancouver where there are different roles played by the Chinese, Vietnamese, East Indian and Central American gangs) so overall patterns of immigrant offending would mask much interesting variation by category of offences and immigrant identity. There is plentiful research on visible minorities but this largely deals with Aboriginal and Black offenders; significant numbers of the latter are immigrants or first-generation Canadians but the available data 7

8 do not allow for such comparison between native-born and foreign-born offending (Wortley and Bempah, 2009). Where significant, salient research literature has been accumulating is with respect to immigrant youth and second generation immigrants. For example the article, The Integration of Black Francophone Immigrant Youths in Ontario: Challenges and Possibilities 2008, deals with concerns surrounding languages, racism and violence among Black francophone immigrant youths in Ontario. The Black Francophone category includes refugees, newcomers and first generation Haitian and Black African immigrants; the study identified language barriers leading to isolation and racism as central problems for these youths who disproportionately became involved in crime. Another interesting research article, Racialized Youth, Identity and the Labour Market: The Vietnamese Second Generation (2008) focused upon second generation youths who become alienated from their immigrant parents and caught up in a non-assimilative quandary where disproportionately they get into conflict with the law. According to the researcher, the coping strategies for some youth involved putting on a tough front, adopting gangsta-like mannerisms, and depreciating the value of formal educational achievement. The researcher emphasized the importance of gender identity and explored ways to balance the toughness attitude with commitment to academic success, a strategy that some such youth apparently were able to achieve. The research literature on immigrant youth captures the combination of perceived marginalization, racism threats, and culture conflict exacerbating the conventional generational conflict which increasingly has characterized modern society. This pattern was also evidenced in a report of the Halifax Community Justice Society which has been engaged in outreach to the HRM immigrant communities in conjunction with its restorative justice program (2009). Several studies have explored offending and victimization by first, second and subsequent generation immigrants: and have found stability in the rates from second generation onwards. One of these studies, while describing the more general patterns that contextualize the problems of immigrant youth, reported that the majority of immigrant youth somehow manage to adapt successfully and without crime despite the challenges (Experiences of Second Generation Canadians, 2008). The article provided a list of six major characteristics of second generation youths drawn from research conducted in Toronto, Winnipeg and Calgary. These six are, to quote, 1. Strong Attachments to home and school: This serves as the heart of their identifications and provides them with human and social capital in the form of support and sources of understanding of themselves and the world around them. connections, 2. Sense of being Canadian: Most, if not all participants are able to imagine themselves as Canadian and recognize that they are on a journey of life, moving across cultural and other spaces at home, school walls and elsewhere, in youth specific and friendly places. 3. Mobility of mind: Allows adolescents to think, imagine and experience cultural identifications as part of the integrative process. Immobility of mind with respect to change is central to the angst experienced around dual cultural attachments by a few second generation participants. Most participants do not appear to be experiencing this angst. 4. Recognition of multiculturalism. 8

9 5. Susceptibility to consumerism. 6. Façade of local spaces: Some are highly critical of globalization and multiculturalism seeing beyond the façade and the ideal to recognize the unpleasantness behind the scenes. These youths are more likely to strongly and critically identify the issues of overconsumption, racism and human rights inherent in the human and environmental exploitations that sustain current approaches to globalization. Other research has focused, as noted earlier, on reaction to real or perceived racism and angst from the immobility of mind cited in point #3 above. For example, Experiences of Second Generation Youth of Haitian origin in Quebec (ibid) discussed angst rooted in a difficulty integrating with Canadian culture and society as a major source of problems including trouble with the law - for second generation Haitians in Quebec. Other research and this is an increasing area of research emphasis has highlighted what appears to be a healthy new synthesis of perspectives among Muslim youth. In the article, Creating Genuine Islam: Second Generation Muslims growing up in Canada (2008) the researcher contends that Muslim youths are constructing their identities in general, and their religious identities in particularly diverse and highly original ways, without regard for what the majority might think and without apparent fear of marginalization, as would be expected in a context that claims to permit and even encourage this. Yet these same people, with few exceptions, also claim to feel entirely comfortable in Canada, to consider it a fine place to live, that welcomes immigrants and accepts difference. In short, they are different, but they usually also feel completely, and in unproblematic way, Canadian. Immigrants and the Justice System Research has generally shown that interaction with, and assessment of the justice system, has varied among immigrants, whether by generation, race-ethnic identity or visible minority status or not. Also, the interaction and assessments vary depending upon the segment of the justice system under consideration. For example, visible minorities have usually been less satisfied with the performance of criminal courts and the correctional system than with that of the police, a pattern that has been very common for years among non-immigrants (8). Among diverse racial / ethnic groups, the Chinese were the least likely to rate the courts as doing a good job, while South Asians were the most likely (Visible Minorities, 2004). Overall, only a small proportion of either immigrants or non-immigrants held that the courts in Canada were doing a good job but immigrants were more likely than nonimmigrants to consider that courts were performing well, at least in providing justice quickly, helping victims and helping inmates in prison become law abiding citizens. These views varied too by region as immigrants in British Columbia were least likely to praise the courts or prisons while their Quebec counterparts were most likely to do so. Perhaps the sharpest criticism among all groupings, immigrant and non-immigrant, minorities whether visible or not, was reserved for the parole system and its early release policies. 9

10 There is of course a considerable literature on policing and visible minorities, especially Black and Aboriginal minorities.visible minorities have consistently been less likely than others to rate police as doing a good job with tasks that were related to police accessibility and attitudes such as being approachable and easy to talk to, supplying the public with information on ways to reduce crime and treating people fairly (Visible Minorities, 2004; Clairmont, 2008). Generally both immigrants and non-immigrants have considered that police were doing a good job, but less so if they had contact with police within 12 months specifically these patterns applied with respect to police ensuring safety of citizens and treating people fairly. According to the GSS surveys (national surveys every five years), however, there have not been sharp differences between visible minorities and the general population with respect to reporting crimes to the police or with overall satisfaction with the police; in both instances, roughly one-third of adults claimed that they reported crimes against them to the police and roughly 60% said that they were satisfied with the policing in their area. No information was obtained on assessments of policing among or within the different immigrant communities (as opposed to the visible minorities) but it appears from a variety of sources that immigrants from the Middle East and Africa and immigrants who are refugees may be less likely to hold positive views about their local police (see also the interview data below); the social correlates for such a perspective have been found to be factors such as low socio-economic status, living in high-risk areas, cultural factors, a mix of employment and illegal opportunities, and negative attitudes towards them among the general population. Issues of immigrants engagement or lack of same with legal services was an important theme in the literature search since research carried out by the principal investigator on the unrepresented in criminal and family court and on case processing in criminal court has shown these to be areas where discrepancies in access to justice exist and can make a great difference to the parties (Clairmont, 2006). The immigrant dimension was not a focus in that work since immigrants were so unrepresented in the data systems available to the researcher. Unfortunately, the literature search for this project did not yield much interesting research material from elsewhere in Canada or through national sources such as the CCJS or the GSS in Statistics Canada. The main sources identified were virtually all focused on the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. As noted there (Representation for Immigrants, 2002), 90% of Legal Aid expenditures in Canada devoted to immigration and refugee matters have been spent on refugees. Other immigrants have been less likely to get involved with such legal matters and if so, apparently can afford a lawyer. Refugees severely lack knowledge of law, and absolutely need legal assistance. Much good policy research has been undertaken in this field as well; for example, proposals and strategic action plans have been developed for integrated service delivery. Integration of legal services delivery with delivery of other settlement-related services, such as housing, health care and language training would greatly facilitate adjustment for the newly arrived immigrants and refugee claimants. While little research literature was found dealing specifically and substantially with the use of legal counsel in criminal, family or regulatory areas of justice, it could be expected that much outreach work would be valuable there and especially to the immigrant communities at-risk (low SES, refugees, women etc). There are many community services available to women, and youth of course would virtually always be eligible for legal aid, but it is not clear how adequate they are, and at least in Nova Scotia there is neither a domestic violence court nor enough paralegals reaching out beyond the traditional legal services. The work of the HCJS (focused on youth crime and restorative justice) cited above has included legal information workshops for immigrants which have targeted the divides between parents and youth and between immigrants and the providers of legal services. Several 10

11 studies in Quebec have highlighted the need to correct the shortfalls in provision of outreach services. One 2008 study (Canadian Diversity, 2008) concluded Many Francophone racial minorities are ignorant of the many aspects of Canada s penal system and of the procedures applied in the administration of justice. As result, they are often caught unaware when they must confront the system and Reality in terms of access to justice for Francophone visible minorities requires that we take into account not only language but also race and status (and religious diversity) when administering access to justice policies and programs. Immigrants and Issues Pertaining to Family Court and Women s Rights Perhaps the one area where there has been and continues to be valuable research, though less apparently in Nova Scotia, is with respect to women s victimization and women s rights. The literature centers around the issue of domestic or intimate partner violence (and increasingly parentchild violence) calling attention to its extensiveness in some immigrant communities, and advancing programs and action plans to deal with it. As noted in much of the material (e.g., Ethnocultural Minority Women and Domestic Violence, 1995), while the stress of the immigration process for new immigrants should not be considered as the cause of violence, assaults to wives and children do tend to increase for some immigrant families. Language and cultural and institutional barriers have been identified as major obstacles to change. Often, too, according to the literature, the victims do not understand their legal rights and options in Canada and, even if they do, they are worried about the consequences including the legal consequences of seeking help in the justice system. The Public Legal Education and Information Program has been very important for abused immigrant women in wife assault situations; one pamphlet identified the following issues that immigrant women in abusive relationships face (Lack of Legal Information for Immigrant Women, 1994): Immigrant women must consider many important legal issues as they decide to stay with or leave an abusive relationship, such as immigrant status, sponsorship relationship, eligibility for social assistance, and the possibility that they or their husbands be deported. Language skills may be problematic. It takes time to learn a new language and be able to ask for assistance. Learning a new language can be an insurmountable challenge for many immigrant women, due to their family and relationship structure and social milieu. Privacy concerns because of family values (e.g., familism) may place a role. The emphasis on keeping the family together at all costs may lead some women not to want outsiders to get involved in the private family matter. Community ties may be problematic. An abused immigrant woman seeking help may get rejected by the community in some cultures. First response to temporarily halt abuse may be problematic, as, reportedly, many immigrant women do not trust the police due to their experiences in their country of origin. Literacy can be problematic. Some women come from oral cultures, so even if there is written information available, they may be unable to understand it. Video information be helpful for these women, but with again limitations due to language barrier. may 11

12 Clearly there is salient material on the above issues, both explanatory and policy-wise but what is apparently unavailable is substantial research on the variation in occurrence, response and trends among and within the diverse immigration communities. The variation appears to be so significance as to represent a fatal flaw in the available materials. Overall, the literature search, given the focus here especially on the criminal justice system, produced limited results. There was a shortage of research materials that analyzed the differences among and within the very diverse immigrant communities with respect to offending patterns, victimization and use of legal services; and, of course, even less information is available in Nova Scotia where the immigrant population has been so modest and dwarfed by required attention in research and policy to the two major visible minorities, namely the Aboriginals and the African Nova Scotians. Clearly there is a need to rectify that situation. 12

13 SOCIAL DEMOGRAPHIC DATA Table 1 Predicted Nova Scotia Population Growth, Assuming Zero Net Immigration Total % of Total % of Total % of Total 5-18 Years Total Years Total 65+ Years Total NS Year of Age NS Pop of Age NS Pop of Age NS Pop Pop , % 72, % 127, % 932, , % 73, % 128, % 934, , % 75, % 130, % 936, , % 75, % 131, % 936, , % 76, % 132, % 936, , % 76, % 134, % 936, , % 76, % 136, % 936, , % 76, % 138, % 936, , % 75, % 140, % 935, , % 75, % 143, % 934, , % 74, % 146, % 934, , % 73, % 151, % 933, , % 71, % 155, % 932, , % 70, % 159, % 930, , % 68, % 164, % 929, , % 66, % 168, % 927, , % 64, % 171, % 925, , % 62, % 175, % 923, , % 60, % 180, % 921, , % 58, % 184, % 918, , % 56, % 188, % 915, , % 55, % 193, % 912, , % 53, % 197, % 908, , % 53, % 201, % 904, , % 52, % 205, % 899, , % 52, % 209, % 895,170 Source: Canmac Economics Ltd., May

14 Table 2 Immigrants residing in Halifax Census Metropolitan Area as a percentage of Canada s and Nova Scotia s immigrant population, by period of immigration. Source: Recent Immigrants to Metropolitan Areas: Halifax, Metropolis Project, 2005 Table 3 Immigrants, Canadian-born and total population, Halifax Census Metropolitan Area, Nova Scotia and Canada, 1986, 1996 and 2001 Note: In Table 3, population totals for 1996 and 2001 include non-permanent residents as well as immigrants and the Canadian-born. Non-permanent residents are not included in Table 3 for 1986 nor are they included in any population figures elsewhere in this report. Table 4 14

15 Immigrants as a percentage of the population, Halifax Census Metropolitan Area, Nova Scotia and Canada, 1986, 1996 and 2001 Table 5 Immigrants by period of immigration, Halifax Census Metropolitan Area, Nova Scotia and Canada, 2011 (number and percentage) Table 6 Immigrants by period of immigration top ten countries of birth, Halifax 15

16 Census Metropolitan Area, 2001 (number and percentage distribution) 16

17 Table 7 Recent immigrants by period of immigration landings by immigration category, Halifax Census Metropolitan Area, (number and percentage distribution) Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada, Facts and Figures 2002 (data set). Note: The 2001 Census did not ask immigrants about the immigration categories through which they were admitted to Canada. The information in (Table 7) was obtained from records at Citizenship and Immigration Canada and pertains to the time of landing. Table 8 17

18 Immigrants by period of immigration and Canadian-born 15 years of age and over, with income average income and sources of average income, by gender, Halifax Census Metropolitan Area, 2000 Note: Incomes are for the year In all tables in (Table 8), immigrants and very recent immigrants include only those who landed before the year 2000 and could have had income the entire year. 18

19 SURVEY DATA FROM VIOLENCE AND PUBLIC SAFETY IN HRM INQUIRY Survey data gathered in 2007 as part of the Roundtable on Violence and Public Safety in Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM) were examined, the objective being to explore whether there were possibly significant differences between self-identified immigrants and non-immigrants in their sense of safety and security, victimization and views about the criminal justice system. As noted in the previous section on socio-demographic data the immigrant population of HRM is quite small with the consequence that those respondents identifying themselves as immigrants were too few to warrant sophisticated statistical tests of difference with the native-born; only general patterns of similarity and difference can be noted. First, there will be analyses of the telephone and mail-back surveys completed with one adult in each of the households contacted. Telephone and Mail-back Surveys ( ) Table 9 in this section examines the responses of adult immigrants selected out from the large telephone and mail-back surveys carried out in It can be noted that there were only 19 immigrant respondents in the telephone survey of 1206 and 23 in the mail-back sample of 1956, a little over 1% of these large randomized representative HRM surveys. Table 9 indicates that there are sharp differences associated with socio-economic status, here represented by rent or home ownership in particular; telephone respondents were much less likely than mail-back respondents to own their place of residence and that, as we found, in the overall comparison of telephone and mail-back responses, impacted on one s perception of crime as increasing, and one s worry about victimization, whether property or person victimization. Immigrant homeowners completing the mail-back survey were also more likely to reside in high risk areas which would further enhance these kinds of perceptions and worries. On the other hand, females were found to have more worry and safety concerns in the larger studies and the proportion of female respondents was greater among telephone respondents. Such a gender pattern emerged even in the very small samples of immigrants and presumably countered to some extent the SES factors in the comparison of telephone and mail-back immigrant respondents. The small number of immigrant respondents in either survey made it imperative to aggregate the responses which even then only add up to 42. Table 9 results indicate some useful themes for this aggregate. The immigrant respondents were mostly under 55 years of age (76%), mostly female, and had lived in Halifax for less than ten years (64% and 67% respectively). They were very likely to be home owners (81%) but quite varied in their household incomes (50% reported such incomes to be under $60,000 annually). They varied considerably in their perceptions of whether HRH was a high crime area, whether crime had been increasing of late, and whether they felt safe and relatively free from worry about property crimes or violent victimization. Most had a high sense of personal mastery (as measured by a conventional social science scale). Their overall views and assessments regarding policing and the justice system, when ventured, were somewhat critical (e.g. sentencing not being severe enough, how youth crime was dealt with). While the large majority (83%) had no relatives living nearby, a clear majority (71%) considered that their neighbourhood was a place where neighbours helped one another. Table 10 provides a comparison with the large samples overall frequencies (i.e., the marginals). Again, the numbers for the immigrant respondents were too few to facilitate analytical depth but overall a few comparisons can be noted. The immigrants were younger, average in terms of 19

20 home ownership and household income, less integrated in their local community areas with fewer relatives or close friends but only slightly less likely than the non-immigrant majority to consider their neighbourhood as one where people help one another (i.e., 71% to 80%). The immigrant respondents were less likely to report the HRM crime rate as either high or increasing (e.g., regarding the latter the percentages were 29% to 54% among non-immigrants). On average they were not different from non-immigrants (collapsing the telephone and mailback results) in worrying about property or person victimization, feeling safe in the evening and so forth. Their reported sense of personal mastery was roughly similar to that of the non-immigrants and they differed but modestly in their reliance on friends and relatives as opposed to TV and radio for news about crime and public safety. Adjusting for their understandably greater tendency to respond don t know, the immigrants had quite similar assessments of policing and the justice system (i.e., positive about the former and critical about the latter). The proportions in each sub-grouping immigrants and non-immigrants who lived in high risk areas (determined by objective criteria) or who had been victimized in the past five years, were also quite similar, namely 24% to 23% in high risk areas and 57% to 49% for victimization. What tables 9 and 10 suggest then is that at a very general level the differences between immigrant and non-immigrant adults may be quite modest in terms of socio-economic status and in their perceptions of crime and threat, their level of victimization, in their assessments of policing and the justice system and their own sense of personal mastery in life. The immigrants were different in being of younger age, less locally integrated through relatives and friendship ties in their neighbourhoods and much less likely to perceive HRM as either a high crime or an increasing crime milieu. There were socio-economic status (SES) differences within the immigrant sub-sample which could prove statistically significant in larger representative samples. Sophisticated analyses based on larger samples might well show sharp differences in their experiences with and views about policing and the justice system as indeed was found in the in-depth analyses that were carried out in the large non-immigrant sample (Clairmont, 2008). Student On-Line Survey (2008) A large on-line survey of post-secondary students, mostly studying at Dalhousie University, was completed as part of the Roundtable on Violence and Public Safety. There were 1542 respondents of whom 65 self-identified as recent immigrants and 104 as International students. Together, these two groupings accounted for roughly 10% of the entire sample of The categories, recent immigrant and international student, were not mutually exclusive and 22 persons appeared in both; no adjustment was made to deal with the overlap for this write-up. Table 11 depicts the data the marginals - for each of the three samples of students. The international and the recent immigrant respondents were more likely than other participating students to be male (roughly 45% to 31%) and, given the significance of gender as a factor in views and experiences concerning violence and public safety, this difference alone could be a significant cause of any differences between the two groupings. The immigrant-international students overall were less likely than other students to perceive HRM as having a high level of crime (roughly 16% to 32%). They were quite similar to the larger student population in their views about feeling safe walking in the evening and worrying about being a victim of property or personal violence. While there was significant internal variation in responses about the crime level and worrying about property theft, there was much consensus among the immigrant-international student grouping that they felt safe; fully 80% reported that they were satisfied with their personal safety 20

21 from crime and violence, quite similar percentage-wise to the views of the larger student population. Actual criminal victimization in HRM was low in all three samples (roughly 6%) and at least 70% across the board indicated that they had never been a victim of crime (the timeframe here stretched back at least five years). The immigrant-international students were, however, three times more likely (roughly 21% to 7%) to report that they had experienced racial discrimination in some fashion in the Downtown milieu. The immigrant-international students were quite similar to the mainstream post-secondary students surprisingly so in their dependence on the conventional media (TV and radio) for their information about crime and public safety and reproduced virtually the same marginals in their responses regarding informational dependence on friends and relatives. There was much consensus within and between the student sub-samples. Similarly, despite some literature reports and official musings, there was little difference among the three samples with respect to views on policing and the perceived adequacy of that service nor was there indication of significant variation among samples in terms of considering their neighbours to be trustworthy. Overall, then, the views and experiences of the immigrant-international students were quite similar to mainstream post-secondary student population and they, with much consensus, considered HRM to be a low crime and a reasonably safe milieu. 21

22 QUESTIONS Age Gender How long have you lived in Halifax? Dwelling owned or rented? Household income Community integration Crime rate in HRM? In the last several years has crime How safe do you feel walking alone in local area after dark? Table 9 Immigrant Survey Sample from Violence and Public Safety in the HRM RESPONSES TELEPHONE SURVEY VALID PERCENT (OVERALL) N=19 MAIL-BACK SURVEY VALID PERCENT (OVERALL) N=23 TELEPHONE & MAIL-BACK SURVEY (COMBINED) N=42 Under % 74 % 76 % Over % 26 % 24 % Male 21 % 48 % 36 % Female 79 % 52 % 64 % Less than 10 Years 74 % 61% 67% Owned 63 % 96 % 81 % Rented 37 % 4 % 19 % Low (Under $60,000) 54 % 50 % 52 % High ($60,000 Plus) 46 % 50 % 48 % Low Level 58 % 79 % 68 % High Level 42 % 21 % 32 % High 21 % 26 % 24 % Average 32 % 43 % 38 % Low 42 % 26 % 33 % Don t Know 5 % 4 % 5 % Increased 21 % 35 % 29 % Remained the same 58 % 48 % 54 % Don t know 16 % 17 % 17 % Safe 63 % 44 % 52 % Unsafe 37 % 56 % 48 % Are you worried Not Worried at if you leave All 63 % 26 % 43 % home/apt/room unattended, but locked, for more Worried 37 % 74 % 57 % than a few hours? How worried Not Worried at 68 % 35 % 50 % 22

23 are you about being attacked or molested? How worried are you about having your property broken into? When you go out in the evening, do you feel All Worried 32 % 65 % 50 % Not Worried at All 47 % 17 % 31 % Worried 53 % 83 % 69 % Very Safe 47 % 9 % 26 % Somewhat Safe 47 % 59 % 52 % Unsafe 5 % 32 % 21 % 23

24 QUESTIONS In general, how satisfied are you with your personal safety from crime and violence? Do you agree with this statement? You have little control over what happens to you Do you agree with this statement? What happens to you in the future depends mostly on you Do you agree with this statement? You can do just about anything you really set your mind to. Do you rely most on TV or radio news for information on crime or public safety? Do you rely most on friends and relatives for information on RESPONSES TELEPHONE SURVEY VALID PERCENT (OVERALL) N=19 MAIL-BACK SURVEY VALID PERCENT (OVERALL) N=23 TELEPHONE & MAIL-BACK SURVEY COMBINED (COMBINED) N=42 Very Satisfied 58 % 30 % 43 % Somewhat Satisfied 42 % 52 % 48 % Dissatisfied 0 % 17 % 10 % Agree 16 % 32 % 24 % Neither agree or disagree 10 % 18 % 14 % Disagree 74 % 50 % 61 % Strongly Agree 21 % 9 % 23% Agree 47 % 52 % 50 % Neither agree nor disagree 26 % 9 % 17 % Disagree 5 % 13 % 10 % Strongly Agree 26 % 13 % 18 % Agree 58 % 61 % 60 % Neither agree nor disagree 11 % 13 % 12 % Disagree 5 % 13 % 10 % Yes 26 % 57 % 43 % No 74 % 43 % 57 % Yes 26 % 9 % 17 % No 74 % 91 % 83 % 24

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